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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER, HYRUM, UTAH PASSE HOMESPUN i worn Woolen homespun was our of Republic days early the Ind played a very important part much clothed and keeping the nation Pathfinder Magazine. arIDi says But homespun is practically now. Today most of our fine to the making of ool adapted worsted yarns choice woolen and mto the different as suiting, dress goods, goods, such which are wools, Medium tc. coarser than the fine wools, are in the manufacture use(j principally of nearly all de--; 0( woven fabrics well being especially scriptions, and tweeds for blankets, adapted flannels, suitings, and very choice knitting yarns. . i EBONY i i i i WATERS ua-kno- ; ( ( By Anna McClure SHoll CUT DNT down ! i ON FOOD lbs. by taking Kruschen bad no ill effect on me. I didnt cut down on a single food I recommend it to anyone who is overweight. Mrs. A. Ropiak, So. Milwaukee, Wise. To win a slender, youthful figure take a of half teaspoonfid Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water first thing every morning. While fat is leaving you gain in strength, health and physi-- ; cal charm look younger. Many physicians prescribe it and thousands of fat folks all over the world have achieved slenderness. A jar lasts 4 weeks and costs but a trifle at any drugstore. But make sure you get protect your'kealth Kruschen its the SAFE way to re-- , duce and money back if not joyfully satisfied. Copyright by W. G. Chapman WNU Service i I ( SYNOPSIS her way to a position in Lost-lan- d Academy,Janet Mercer, young professor of English literature and meets on rhetoric, the train a young man, Arthur Fleming, also on his way ito the Academy, as professor of mathematics and chemistry. They reach the .railroad station, and meet Mrs. Denver, engaged as matron of the Academy. CHAPTER I Continued -- 2 e, hotel to the main entrance. ROOMS 400 ... 490 BATHS Large, modern, comfortable, homelike. Friendly service, personal courtesy, delicious food, reasonable prices, convenient location. No parking worries. Make your reservations nou . THE GREAT NORTHERN HOTEL JACKSON BLVD. , DEARBORN .QUINCY STS. CHICAGO .ILL. EARL L. THORNTON, Vice-Pre- s. Eczema on Hands About five miles." Skin Peeled Off in Pieces C uticura Healed I was troubled with eczema on my hands for ever so long. I could not put my hands in much water because after I got through I could just peel the skin off in pieces. It would form uke a rash and bothered me terribly, burning and itching. My hands were sights and I was ashamed. "I frted a lot of different remedies that did not help. I sent for a free sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and it helped a lot I bought more and now my hands are completely healed. (Signed) Mrs. H. S. Hammond, 10 Pleasant St., Hollis-toMass., Aug. 16, 1933. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. alcum 25c. Sold everywhere. One sample each free. Address: Cuti-m-a n. Mass.-A- Laboratories, Dept R, Malden, dv. Is it near a village? It used to be were cornin to the ruins a genuine deserted village. It was called Lostland, too, in the old days. Where do you get your supplies? From the city from Oteaga. There was no time for further discussion; for now they were entering a road protected from curious visitors by , high iron gates newly painted, spanned by an iron grille bearing in letters once gilded the words "Lost-lan-d Academy. They now beheld a great mansion looming beyond the immense pines, which were shaking in the wind Built massively in the shape of a Greek temple, its high porch columns reached to the roof and supported a tympanum on which was bleaching a Latin motto in tall, black, faded letters which Fleming at Janets request translated as the Biblical text, Unless the Lord build the house, their labor is in vain that build it. From the central body of the buildwas of brick, warm and time-tone-d and superimposed upon a basement of granite blocks, two wings of the same material jutted out; the whole covered with huge metallic green patches of English ivy carefully cut away from the long, narrow Georgian windows filled with small panes of glass flashing purple and violet iridescence. Lilac bushes almost as tall as trees partially hid some of A strange windows. the ground-floo- r hush was over the place, so deep, so profoundly unbroken by human voices or sounds, that the three passengers spoke in whispers as if not to introduce a discordant note. An evergreen walk, outlined by enormous, century-ol- d box bushes, stretched to a far perspective. In that walk a tall man was pacing with a cloak over his shoulder. He looked both unhappy and reliable. The car stopped before a majestic front door with a fan and filled In with delicate Iron tracery. Shoe scrapers in ancient Iron flanked the stone steps. Down these a man about forty years of age came to greet them; tall, clean shaven, with bright, restless eyes and an manner, he seemed more like a very keen financier than a schoolmaster. He was fastidiously dressed in a nearly new suit of leaf brown; n tie held a scarf-pi- n his neat, which Janet noticed at once, a cameleon carved in the shape of a tiny deaths head. In his buttonhole be wore a gardenia, strangely reminiscent, Janet thought, both of funerals and festivities. ing, which CR1SMON & NICHOU ASSAYERS AND CHEM1 Laboratory Laka 229-23- S. 1 city- - Utah. furnish8' onMalllner envelopes request and Salt Lake Citys fewest Hotel U44 I'K rot,-- ' side-ligh- HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM 1.50 fatoppoiil. Mormon Tobmudo C. ROSSITER, Mgr. ini" They followed him into a broad, imposing hall paved with lozenges of black and white marble, which at one place bore an Insertion in green stone of a laurel wreath surrounding the letters In black marbles, Lostland Academy." On the d side walls hung dark oil paintings of stern and scholarly men in gown and bands, their yellowed hands resting on neat piles of books. Beyond them, one of a much later date, and apparently executed by a portrait painter of ability. It represented a man in middle life, clothed in the academic gown, with a crimson hood, and wearing the mortar board. The gown was flying in the wind Indicated by bending treetops and a wild ts over-solicito- dark-maroo- The Housewifes Idea Box Intermountain News Briefly told for Busy leaders FIRE LOSSES LESS $12,000 FOR ROADS BOISE DAIRYMEN rROFIT PROTEST FEDERAL ACTION BOISE, IDA. E. P. Horsfall, FERA administrator, lias announced that funds may be obtained now by Idaho for establishing schools and educational camps for unemployed woihen. The locations of the schools tentatively agreed on are Pocatello, Lewiston, Weiser and Boise. PRICE, UT. With the development of Carbon countys coal industry as one of the major objectives, the newly organized Price chamber of commerce has passed a joint resolution with the Rotary club protesting governmental development of hydroelectric plants. In discussing the matter, the board of directors espresed the opinion the development of such plants seriously threatens the coal industry, reducing production and throwing miners out of jobs. sky of cumulus clouds, and the artist had put an expression in the eyes far removed from academic calm a searching, hungry, sorrowful look. The background was the savage scenery of the neighborhood. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Fire The first three presidents of Lost-lanlosses in the city for the first five Haskell said, with a wave of months of 1934 are $44,949 less the hand toward the older portraits. than for the corresponding months Who Is the fourth the very sad of 1933 and much lower than recgentleman who seems to be running ords over a long period of years. from this spot? Arthur asked boldly. PROVO, UT. With hut $500 of Haskell changed color, flashing a the stockholders liability of the look almost of hatred at his new closed Provo Commercial and SavThe fourth is Dr. Jethro teacher. ings bank paid since February 27, Bracebridge," he replied curtly. the amount still unpaid totals I see a lake in the background. Is accounts of the bank for the there a lake near here? Janet questhree-montperiod filed in the distioned. court. trict terrificalwe have a small but "Yes, KANAB, UT. $12,000 has been ly deep lake almost back of the appropriated for road projects near grounds; and from it recedes one of Kanab. Six thousand dollars will those wild gorges for which this midbe expended on a road between dle section of New York state is just0 Johnson and Kanab, the other ly famous. will be spent on state highway It has a waterfall, of course? No. 89, from Kanab to a point near Janet remarked. Dianas Throne upon the sand north Haskell gave her a piercing look. of town. Are you clairvoyant? Yes, it has a fall rather a high and terrible fall RUPERT, IDA. Rupert school a direct sheer drop of two hundred district will hold a special election and twenty-fiv- e feet from an in July to vote on bonding for $8000 ledge. Above this fall, he conto raise funds for construction of tinued, his manner becoming more gratwo classrooms to be built adjointhe cliffs rise to a height of cious, ing the present transportation build- -' four hundred feet Let me show you ing on the school property. into the drawing room. IDA. F ERA POCATELLO, He ushered them into a long apartin Power, Franklin, Carioperations ment filled with green-velvbou, Bear Lake, Bingham and Bancovered chairs and sofa. Over nock counties during the past week, the fireplace hung a painting of the a total of $11,014.48 to work-- netted old academy, representing it in the to a report by the era, according blandness of some forgotten summer, a district disbursing officer. before the drawn up ST. ANTHONY, IDA. A total pillared portico, and little girls in full of $177,200 of federal land bank skirts and pantalettes rolling hoops and land bank commissioners farm on the trim walks or playing battledore and shuttlecock on the shaved mortgage loans was made in Fremont county the past year, the farm green lawns. Some old samplers hung credit administration reports. on the wall, the work of children gone long ago to their rest. A large photoCHEYENNE, WYO. Heavy rains graph album bound In green leather and considerable hail brought a console table. lay on a marble-toppe- d good supply of moisture to the Mechanically Janet raised Its cover. ranges and fields of the southeastDont touch that, please, Haskell ern corner of Wyoming. said sharply. PROVO, UT. Suit seeking damShe took her hand away flushing of $10,070.50 for the death of ages I with embarrassment. beg your parhis daughter, Mon-eac-e don. I really have no special Interest Anderson who was fatally inIn the book. jured when struck by a falling tree "No matter, Miss Mercer. I suppose at North (Sowiette) park on AuIm fussy. Perhaps the old things gust 26, 1933, has been filed in disshouldnt be about but I like to have trict court, by W. K. Anderson of everything as It was in my stepfaProvo against Provo City. thers time my stepfather, Dr. Jethro PROVO, UT A budget calling Bracebridge. I was very devoted to for the expenditure of $214,290.98, him. I watched over his last melanan increase of $12,217.38 over last choly years when the old place was year, was adopted by the Provo shut up. Well have tea here, and city school board, following a pubrooms. can to Youll then you go your lic hearing. dine upstairs tonight. Janet was beginning to breathe more IDAHO FALLS, IDA. Formal application for $25,000 for drouth freely. She removed her hat, and her relief in Bonneville county has been soft, burnished brown hair released made with the state drouth relief made a kind of aureole about ber face. committee by the Bonneville county Her eyes with excitement and fatigue commission. The sum was asked for were at once bright and dark, and more deeply blue than Arthur had the immediate relief of livestock owners and is planned to be used ever known a womans eyes. Even Mrs. Denver looked at her with a kind primarily to improve waterlioles and creeks in the range country east of maternal admiration; and Arthur of Idaho Falls. felt anticipatory jealousy of Hamlet. They saw him pass the three OGDEN, UT. A 22 per cent infront windows walking slowly, his crease in water collections during cloak blowing in the wind. Then he the first five months of 1934 as comentered ; a young man with old eyes, a pared with a like period in 1933 very sensitive, slightly repressed mouth, has been reported by Fred E. Willand a rather puzzled, almost appreiams, city commissioner in charge hensive expression. of waterworks. "I am Wilton Payne, the new teachREXBURG, IDA. Carl Madsen, er of psychology," he said simply. federal officer from Idaho Falls, has Arthur shook hands with him, and been working in Rexburg for sevintroduced him to Janet and Mrs. Deneral days helping county officers in ver. Upon Janet his eyes rested with a liquor clean-u- p campaign. friendly quiet admiration. IDAHO FALLS, IDA. A comAnd you, I believe, Miss Mercer, mittee representing eight upper are to bring Crashaw, and Chaucer, Snake River valley counties was Burns and Shelley to this ancient authorized at a mass meeting of apacademy? proximately 400 upper valley water I hope so! users to protest delays in comIn all my life I never knew a place pletion of proposed reservoir site so silent, Mrs. Denver announced In surveys on the upper river and also a hushed voice and with a look over to protest any proposed additions her shoulder, as If she were afraid of to American Falls dam which might some one creeping up behind her. result In increasing the capacity of Where are the scholars? that reservoir to the disadvantage Wilton Payne and Arthur exchanged of the upper valley citizens. If as reading each others glances, and POCATELLO, IDA. History of thought, looked nervously away. The former arose from his seat and stared the past 100 years of Idaho, the out of one of the windows. northwest, and particularly of Fort I wonder If houses possess mental Hall, will be reenacted in pageants and emotional states approximating and parades, outstanding features those of a long line of occupants. of the Fort Hall Centennial celebraThis place seems absolutely vibrant to tion here August Pocatello me; as If people were hurrying will sponsor American Legion post through the corridors, and yet I havent a campaign to add seen a soul since I arrived an hour color to the celebration. ago. The city was negligent in that it A rather obtuse-lookin- g country womallowed the trees to be removed an entered with a tea tray and put it from the park by agents who wer down on the marble-toppetable which incompetent, the complaint states. occupied the center of the room. d, The farmer continued gazing at them ; then, as if this were none of his business, he chirped to his horses and the wagon moved ponderously forward. At the same moment they heard the distant chug of a motor, and a car swung into view from around a curve. Behind it, clattering and swaying, appeared an open wagon, drawn by two bony white horses. The poor beasts evidently had been whipped down the mountain, and Janet, now seeing singularity in the most obvious circumstances, Jelt that even the horses in this wild region looked like the horses in a miracle pageant, lean and scarred and with long, thin necks protruding toward scenes .in which, animal-likthey scented disaster. The man who drove the car was a his septuagenarian in appearance; companion, directing the white horses, a youngish fellow with a rather sullen air. The new teachers? he asked with a kind of leer toward the imperturbable old man on the front seat. Yes and as you have but one train a day here, it seems to me you ought to be able to meet it promptly, Fleming remarked, conscious that his structures were not altogether logical. The man laughed and began putting the baggage in his wagon and adjusting a tarpaulin over it, with the comment that it was likely to rain. The old driver of the car indicated by a wave of the hand that they were to get in; Mrs. Denver and Janet, both secretly rather unhappy and nervous, took their places. But when the car began its journey into the hills the three newcomers lost for the time their anxiety in wonder over the view which every height or curve unfolded to their eyes. How far is it? foam-flecke- . . . and youll want a room at the Great Northern Hotel so you can see Chicago as well as the Worlds Fair. Convenient to shops, theatres, depots and all of Chicagos great civic attractions. Right in the heart of everything. Nearest loop come white-panele- i On 1 lost 57 Salts and it : j i 57 POUNDS OF FAT-DI- ! i i LOST ! "Ah, toy new teacher of English literature I my new teacher of mathematics ! my new matron I he said in a soft, almost paternal voice which filled Janet with a vague resentment Welcome! welcome! Down that avenue between the evergreen hedges you see the new professor of psychology almost like Hamlet In appearance, Isn't he? I told him he suited the old academy quite marvelously. Come in ! 3, h $6,-00- g coach-and-fo- 5-- beard-growin- d TO BB CONTINUED. g To Improve Potato Salad Potato salad Is a great favorite with many people. You can make it still better liked if the next time you prepare it you try this: Chop up nut meats and celery or parsley, or both. Add these to the salad You will be surprised to find what an improvement this is. Besides, it adds nutrt-men- t. THE HOUSEWIFE. Just before serving it. Copyright by Public Ledger, Inc, HUGOS TRIBUTE TO GREAT SAGE Eulogy of Voltaire Held as Masterpiece. Just a century after Voltaires death in 1778, Victor Hugo delivered an oration on the man and liis abiding influence, a writer in the Kansas City Star recalls. Hugo was not only his countrys greatest poet in the Nineteenth century, but equally famed as the writer of such celebrated dramatic novels as Notre Dame and Les Miserables. He was also a superb orator, and it is safe to say that no more eloquent words have been spoken concerning the Eighteenth century sage during all the years which elapsed since 1778 when Voltaire laid down the burden of his body. j populace to the dignity of peocivple. He taught, pacificated, ilized. He was indefatigable and immovable. He conquered violence by a smile, despotism by sarcasm. Infallibility by irony, obstinancy by perseverance, ignorance by truth. I have used the word, smile. It Is Voltaire. Whatever may be his just wrath, is passes, and the irritated Voltaire always gives way to the Voltaire calmed. Then in that profound eye the smile appears. That smile, I repeat. Is Voltaire. Luminous, that smile was fruitful also. The new soceity, the society for equality and concession, and that beginning of fraternity which calls Itself tolerance, reciprocal good will, the Just accord of men and rights, reason recognized as the supreme law, the annihilation of prejudices and fixed opinions, the serenity of souls, the spirit of Indulgence and of reason, harmony, peace behold, all has come from that great smile 1 Earmark Identification Earmarks rather than finger-print- s as a means of identification Is proposed by Prof. Henry F. Perkins, director of the Fleming museum of the University of Vermont, who has discovered nearly 150 distinct characteristic formations In the human ear. Not necessarily connected with the criminal, eastern monarchs have used the thumbs Impression, the sign manual, as a surety against forgery, Indias courts have used prints for Identification and Amerl-ica- n maternity hospitals for Identifying babies. Photography, not portraiture, has shown individuality In the human ear, once thought only found in the hands. Professor Perkins has called attention to this most easily recognized means of Identifying criminals. Literary Digest. fSBVE&MflBEIIMH and WORK than a 10022 The following passage from that address, May 30, 1878, vividly sums WASHING MACHINE up what the later great Frenchman felt concerning the earlier great man of the same race: In the presence of this society, Matchei or Torch... No frivolous and dismal, Voltaire alone, No Heating with ..Lights Instantly, Lika Gas Waiting. those united before his eyes having DEDUCE your ironing time voices, the court, the nobility and The Cole . . . your labor unconscious ; that that power, capital Iron will save you man blind multitude; that terrible magismore time and work than a $100 washtracy, so severe to subjects, so docile ing machine! Iron any place where you can be comfortable. No endless trips carrying to the master, crushing and flattering, Iron from stove to board Operating cost only kneeling on the people before the yd an hour. Helps you do bettet Ironing, quicker. king: that clergy, vile melange of easier, See your hardware or house furnishing dealer. Voltaire hypocrisy and fanaticism If local dealer doesn't handle, write us THE COLEMAN LAMP & STOVE COMPANY alone, declared war against that Dept. WU805, Wichita, Kang.; Chicago, IH.; Los coalition of all the social iniquities, Angeles, Calif.; Philadelphia, Pa.; or Toronto U&KJ Canada. Ontario, enormous terrible and against that world, and he accepted battle with It. And what was his weapon? That POOR COMPLEXIONS which has the lightness of the wind and the power of the thunderbolt. Clogged pores, pimples improved ia A pen. With that weapon he fought: a few days by Resinol Soap and the with that weapon he conquered. Gentlemen, let us salute that He conquered the memory. old code and the old dogma. He conquered the feudal lord, the Goth25-- 34 He raised the WUN W ic judge. one-thir- d one-hal- f! Self-Heati- 1 Resinol ... ... the NEWMttJE MOTEL A Distinctive Residence Mrs. J. H. Waters, Abode. ..renowned President West the Throughout Salt Lake9s Most Hospitable HOTEL Invites You Art 1 RATES SINGLE $2.00 to $4.00 DOUBLE $2,50 to $4.50 400 Rooms 400 Batbs THE Hotel Mewltouse W. E. SUTTON, General Manager CHAUNCEY W. WEST Assist . Gen. Manager YOUR TOWN YOUR STORK JUR community includes the farm homes surrounding the town. The town stores are there for the accommodation and to serve the people of our farm homes.The merchants who advert rise "specials are merchants who are sure they can meet all competition in both quality and prices. |